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| Episco-Pals at McDonald's | |||||||||
![]() Gerald Henderson
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Episcopal Academy teammates Gerald Henderson and Wayne Ellington captured the dunk and three-point championships at the McDonald's All-American Game. | ||||||||
SAN DIEGO - It can't be the water at The Episcopal Academy because, well, Gerald Henderson doesn't really drink it. "Our gym water doesn't taste too good," said the 6-foot-5 Duke signee after winning the McDonald's All-American Game Slam-Dunk competition.
The dual Episcopal victories highlighted the Jam Fest activities at San Diego State University's Petersen Gym that included a victory by LSU-bound Allison Hightower of Seguin, Texas, in the girl's Three-Point Shootout and a Pac-10 win by Stanford-bound Michelle Harrison of Orem, Utah, and UCLA-bound James Keefe of Rancho Santa Margarita, Calif., in the Team-Ball Competition. Henderson's easily was the most electrifying and executed with the highest degree of difficulty. That's because he and the two other finalists, Chase Budinger of nearby Encinitas, Calif., and Darrell Arthur of Dallas, waited several minutes while repairs were made to a rim damaged by an Arthur dunk attempt. The hiatus almost certainly quelled the energy and momentum generated by Budinger, the volleyball-star-turned-Arizona-Wildcat-baller, who brought the hometown house down with two high-flying slams that each earned perfect scores in the first round.
"Most of the guys lead with their left feet," Henderson said, "but I went with my right." His Episcopal teammate, Ellington, the fourth-best prospect in the country, according to Scout.com, simply went with a shot he could get off. It just happened to be his last in the championship round, and the money ball. Unbeknownst to him, he needed that last shot to beat Demond Carter, the Baylor-bound shooting guard out of Laplace, La. "I had no idea," Ellington said. "Actually I shot that last shot kind of funny, just to get it off as fast as possible."
Henderson watched all the shooting and hoped some would rub off. He plays hard like his father, also Gerald, who is etched in Celtic lore for a steal that helped Boston win the 1984 NBA championship. While his father didn't quite have his ups, the younger Henderson also doesn't have his namesake's silky jumper, either. "I know he played hard because that's what he preaches to me," Henderson said of his father. "He could jump, but he wasn't dunking on people. That wasn't his game. He could shoot the ball. He's been trying to teach me to shoot better. I need the help." On Monday night, dunking and a little patience was enough.
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